To link to the entire object, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed the entire object, paste this HTML in websiteTo link to this page, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed this page, paste this HTML in website

Chicago examiner vol xl no 272 a m tuesday Chicago november 4 1913 tuesday flegtst-rej in u s patent oftie price one cent s?Â«sffe_ss u s demands huerta's immediate retirement stipulates provisional presi dency shall not be turned over to any partisan of the present administration blanquet is barred clash is â€¢ expected to follow the de mand warships ready to shell towns along coast special cable to the examiner mexico city nov 3 without waiting for the formal report of president huerta on the results i of the farcical election held nine days ago the wash ington administration has presented a formal de i mand for the resignation of kuerta the demand was presented last evening by : charge d'affaires o'shaughnessy to senor rabago huerta's secretary no reply or st-tenient of any 1 kind has been forthcoming from huerta or any mem ber of his official famiiy the american demand is not only that huerta : shall resign but also that the provisional presid-_cy shall not be turned over to any partisan of the pre i ent administration this means that general aure i liana blanquet minister of war ij and who ran for vice president on 1 the ticket with huerta oannol take i the presidency if huerta steps out it could not be learned to-night i whether the demand for i huerta's resignation was accoin i panied by any further suggestion i for the holding of an election it has been hinted that felix i diaz may figure in some way in the i plan of the united states for re i habilitation of the mexican govern i ment i await huerta i announcement some definite announcement of i huerta's intentions is expected to i be made to members of the diplo i matic corps who were summoned to i the palace to-night the represen i tatives of germany norway and i russia are absent at vera i cruz but understood that they i are fully advised of the latest de 1 velopments as is special envoy i lind news of carranza's appeal to sec i retary of state bryan was received i here to-day and in view of the atti i tude the washington governij i ment is deemed possible tha t i carranza as the popular leader of a i large section of the people and an i advocate of the restoration of law i and order throughout the republic may have the implied if out i spoken indorsement of the united i states as the successor of huerta felix diaz it learned arrived i at havana ichanges iin the during the day rumors of im bportant pending changes the hcabinet have been actively circu hlated it was stated that members lof the cabinet had been at logger hheads over matters of financial cy including the granting of rich boil lands concessions to cowdray in mterests julian and isidir ftcho and mate h'riends former vice president ianion/corral were arrested to-day ________________ / 1 i roach quits as president of Chicago railways co traction head resigns after long dissension over ossoski's hos pital methods resulting in bus by being put ahead of him henry a blair succeeds man who was last executive held over from yerkes regime roach | remains on the directorate j joan m roach president of the chi ij_u railways company resigned yester day his resignation was accepted by the board of directors and henry a blair was elected in his place mr blair also will be chairman of the board of directors two causes underlie the resignation of | president roach the first and perhaps j the minor cause was a disinclination to play second fiddle to leonard a bus j by president of the Chicago city rail j ways company who was slated under the unified operation plan to be general \ presidetn of the combined roads the second ard chief reason ror the res ignatfotj is i factional labor light be i ween i faction beaded by john 31 roach nn oue side and henry a filair chairman if the hoard of directors on the other i rank a rose formerly chier lnvesti gaior for ihe Chicago railways company p'iaini department and agent for a fac tion of l lie car men'.ls local organization explained the second cou â€”-- night over the telephone t â€¢> on examiner re porter â€¢ objected to gray ghost president roach would not stand for sidney ossoski with his gray gnost au loiuoiiiln and his other peculiar methods ppf accident care said mr rose "_, ro years ago mr roach went after ossoski and hogarth he was successful in get ling hogarth his enmity to ossoski however has been shown in the fight and il incurred the ill feeling of chair man blair who was the original sponsor tor ossoski recently when the lanor delegation went to blair and demanded the resigna tion of ossoski on threat of a strike blair blamed the activity on roach at that time it was decided when the reorganiza tion and unified operation weut into ef fect to make roach a second barytone tip litisipy they knew him well enough to know that john m roach wouldn't tuke that kind of a job ' he left for florida before the directors meeting mr roach has beeu connected with pi ct railway operation in Chicago for more than forty years and his resigna tion takes from active service in chl ngo the last connection with the old yerkes regime mr roach wrote a letter of resigna tion he said he had often expressed his desire to retire and at bis last re-electiou ad taken the position with the under standing that he might do so mr roach entered the street car busi ness in Chicago as a conductor on a horse car for the old north Chicago street l.ailroad company on october 7 1872 before thai he had been a mining pros peetor a newspaper reporter and a schoolteacher when he got tired ot teaching behool he went back to mining mink all ihe money he bad collected from bis other ventures and came to 1 lii'-ago after si months on the back or a car he was made cashier nn the company and in 1879 he became purchasing agent in 1888 he became assistant superintend ent in isiio superintendent assistant â€¢ manager in 1892 second vice president ind manager in 189-l and iu 1597 he ob tained full operating control as tirst vi.'e president and general manager wa nexi to yerkes - he was ihe big man in traction circles finally within a me president of both the p ii lidated and the union trac tjppi companies the reorganization of the xortli and west side lines fouud iliiri head of the Chicago railways com nn.p p the lines were renamed and he j tion antil yesterday tl fa tal be had risen from the j lnl made him pamjlar with the men j i persocal in iit % ften was used i pr vpt-.t ini'or â€¢-%â– o>s to settle isp ppi hi inped inte 1 . â€¢., i and proiro ed a thorough pÂ»r ina investlgatlofc when ihe employes bd i b h_'--_t''h a "â– go is snu i 1 . i igeneral trite john m roach for sixteen years head of Chicago street rail ways who has resigned following the unifica tion of surface systems mrs stewart ill traffic is halted police turn vehicles into another street tc maintain quiet on account of the severe illness of mrs graeme stewart 920 lincoln parkway priimlnent in north side society circles two uniformed policemen were stationed yesterday near the stewart residence and prevented traffic passing there mrs stewart it was reported by a rel ative last night will recover if she obtains absolute quiet mrs stewart recently suffered an at tack of nephritis and at the present time she is an extremely nervous condition said dr philip schuyler doane son-in law of mrs stewart caroline de veaux is suing her husband former vaudeville artist uncovers evidence for her action new york nov 3 caroline da veaux a fashionable modiste np to three years ago of the vaudeville team of de veaux and de veaux to-day filed a suit lor divorce against her hus band wells g de veaux miss e j i_ewi is named mrs de veaux last march found a note in de veaux's pocket addressed my dearest daddy and signed your little girl postoffice gain is 314,000 in month increase of 14.86 per cent over same period last year october business at ihe Chicago post office showed an increase over the cn responding mouth f inst yen ramoumiug to over 14,000 n percentage of gain of 14.86 per cent the largest item of re ceipts was the sale pf stamps and slumped paper totaling 74,5(i."i as compared with 1,968,500.50 for october of 1912 mother kidnatps 75,000 baby in crowded court mrs claudia dillon outwits and outbluffs roomful of bailiffs and lawyers jwoman overrules judge vanishes with six-year-old heir that court awarded to cus tody of guardian the way mrs claudia dillon outwitted i and outbluffed all the bailiffs and deputy j sheriffs ln the county building breezily set aside the authority of the circuit court snatched her 70,000 six-year-old son scott arthur right out or the grip of the law and straightway vanished ln ' broad daylight while a staff of lawyers ! blinked confusedly all this makes one lof the most incredible stories that ever were true the only legal result of proceedings | before judge adelor j petit over the i custody of scott arthur dillon was to ! leave that six-year-old boy legally â€” but not literally in the hands of mcc'lam reinhardt underwriter for the equitable , life assurance company as guardian reinhardt approached to take cnarge gfet away get away screamed the mother you shan't have him she i was formidably hysterical and reinhardt hesitated so did all the court officers they stood in a circle around the mother and her child mrs dillon started for the door apparently seeing nobody but the youugster whose face was held close to hers mother overrules judge reinhardt stepped forward he had just won a somewhat protracted legal battle and there before his eyes his vic tory was walking away from him he stopped squarely in front of mrs dillon madame you know wnat the court has decided surely you out of my way cried the mother don't talk to me of courts this is my child don't you suppose _ know that do i have to have a court to tell me my child is mine but madame don't touch me if you do _ 11 i'll have you arrested for assault here of ficer reinhardt backed off suddenly taken completely off guard his lawyers set forth in hot pursuit of judge petit who had retired to his chambers oblivious of the fact that mrs dillon had overruled him the woman walked to the elevator a gaping crowd opening before her to give her passage she stepped out of the ele vator at the ground floor and walked out of the building hardly had she passed the door when a lawyer his trance dis pelled burst down the stairway crying stop that woman but she was out of sight by that time and at a late hour last night no trace of her had been found it was a kidnaping out of a courtroom and she had got away with it scott arthur dillon and his infant brothers benjamin and jay are among the heirs to the huge estate of mrs mary c dillon their grandmother reinhardt another heir was recently appointed guardian to scott arthur by the ford county court reinhardt then took the child guardian to give up what mrs dillon the mother did was to demand a writ of habeas corpus un der that reinhardt took the boy before judge petit yesterday where mrs dillon made a tearful plea for custody judge petit decided that he could not interfere i witb the ford county court's order ' which means that reinhardt is still the legal custodian of the child it was then ; that mrs dillon overruled the court mrs dillon according to her attorney . thomas j o'hare is in Chicago at the j home of relatives and she has her three i children with her but the lawyer re i fuses to tell the address as for reinhardt's plans neither he nor his lawyers would divulge them lt is said however that he is inclined to give up the fight 1 only went into it as a matter of duty he is quoted as having said to a friend in the courtroom mrs dillons husband is in new mex ico where he is said to have been in trouble recently with the law he and his wife have been separated tor some time the three children from three to six years old are the wealthy members of the family and they are verv popu i lar patten defeated in bond issue battle association votes to postpone action in evanston in spile of protests from james a pat ten of wbeat corner fame in the inter ests of the taxpayers and of mrs rat ten who is a member of the school board the members of the north end improvement association in evauston last night roted to urge a postponement of the special election called by the school board for november 15 that election is to decide a bond issue of 0,000 to build an addition to the high school the association decided it would not be i enough 12,000,000 garrett will attacked by kin cousins of late spinster left 10,000 sue philadelphia xov 3.-miss oiiva walter of baltimore a distant cousin of miss julia garrett who died recently bequeathing the bulk of her fortune es timated at 1_,000,000 to isaac t starr her fiscal agent and cut off her relatives with trifles to-day in the orphans court filed an appeal from the decision of reg ister martin who admitted the garrett will to probate joining miss walter in the suit is agnes w cook another cous in both were left 10,000 by the aged spinster missionary is found lying dead in home disappearance leads to discovery of body of oscar johnson the kev oscar johnson formerly a missionary to china was found dead yes terday in an oxygenless room at his home 3728 bosworth avenue a gas stove was flickering feebly he had been living alone bis wife having gone to california for her bealtb johnson represented in china the swed ish evangelical church of america his wife's ill health forced a return last sep tember after five years the rev carl benson pastor of the cuyler swedish mission church reported johnson's disappearance since friday de tectives found the missionary fully dressed on the bed idle eight years for fear of his friends mrs emma m farmer 2297 milwaukee avenue says she has a husband who dares not support her for fear of what his friends might say in her bill for divorce filed yesterday she quotes her mate as declaring that because ot his large number of influential friends it is impossible for him to go to work without exciting adverse criticism the husband is george t farmer his wife alleges that ever since their marriage in 1905 george has been living on the earnings of her dentistry shoots 2 officers one dead one dying springfield 111 xov john mar tin a special deputy sheriff was shot and instantly killed and j b bird de tective for the Illinois traction system was probably fatally wounded to-night by an unidentified negro who fired three hois at the officers while they were entering the outskirts of the city after arresting another negro at a coal mine near springfield all available polii-e and deputy slier iffs were rushed to ihe vicinity and ihe country for a radius of five miles is ipp fiig scoured for the slayer eugenic bridegroom jilts 100 women denver col xov m d bowen of denver the only prospective eugenic bridegroom who had volunteered his serv ices to the state board of health and who was held up as a possible husband to more than 100 women from all parts of me united states has backed out one hundred women all of whom say they are comely of good figure and in perfect health have been giveu the cold shoulder by one mere man banker stotesbury guards wife's photo j_j philadelphia nov edward t i | slotesbury sr member ot the banking c i firm of j p morgan sr co at last ha < f ! found a new method to punish newspn'i i ers he does not like he won't allow l them to publish a picture of mrs stotes vjtrary mr stotesbury has made good his j prohibition by bi ing every oi,e of tin â€¢ picture for â€” hlch mi stotesbury ever f l â– â– â– â– Â„â– _.â– mrs oviatt lost funk witness is found i by richard henry little i woman who is expected to sub 1 stantiate mrs henning's story â– of plot will take stand to day and tell secrets of suit henning bares relations with donahoe wife is questioned regarding her trips with d h haslam funk to testify margaret oviatt the long missing wit ness has been found a*i.l h is ready to testify for the state i thi prose.u tlon of daniel donahoe an j isaac stiefel for alleged conspiracy to lef-iuie the char acter of clarence s funk with that one fact revealed under dramatic circumstances yesterday after noon the prosecution acw.eyed the great est triumph it has known since the trial started margaret oviatt is an essential witness for the prosecution and she has been mysteriously missing for w s she i alleged to be the woman hired oy dona hoe to be a companion to mrs john c ejennins during the conspiracy against funk ber testimony is expected lo make that of mr henning hei'self na peachment-proof end of hunt dramatic funk himself realizing the importance of the woman concentrates the efforts of his whole investigating staff upon the search for her late yesterday after noon one of these investigators irst iuto the courtroom and almost fell to the floor as he shouted margaret oviatt is nere ready to testify mrs josephine henning as white as the proverbial sheet and so weak from her recent illness that she had to be supported on each side by two stalwart deputy sheriffs tottered into court and removed the fear on the part of the pro secution that she would be unable to complete her testimony mrs hen nlng took the stand at the begin ning of the afternoon session and while at times she looked as though she were about to faint she did not but replied to the questions hurled at her by attor ney forrest counsel for attorney don ahoe in a calm firm voice and at no time showed that anything said by mr forrest caused her the least embarrass ment the defense finished its cross examination of mrs henning at 3:30 without impairing any part of her direct examination d h haslam named after mrs henning left the stand her husband john c henning who brought the civil suit against mr funk for 25 000 was put on the stand and began on his version of the part he played in the alleged conspiracy he was on the stand iu the middle of his direct examination ' when court adjourned he will resume his testimony this morning the more important points he brought out yester day referred to the visits he declared he made to attorney donahoe's oftlce the personal interviews be bad wiih mr don ahoe ihe instructions he declares mr i donahoe gave him in regard lo the plot ! against mr funk and the sums of money i he claims mr donahoe paid him tor ! promising to perjure himself the most interesting part of mrs hen ning's cross-examination was in regard to her acquaintance with a david h haslam of st paul but her answers gave little or uo comfort to the defense mrs henning did uot show the slight est concern when attorney forrest launched the name of haslam on the tip of his index anger straight at her oh yes mrs henning knew mr haslam he was a pleasant gentleman with dia betes who had gone to mudlavia for treatment he was there when she vis ited the indiana health resort at the ln stance as she alleges of mr donahoe mrs henning looked most indifferently at attorney forest as he walked toward her aiming his f.nger and asked her if mr haslam had not inen with her at new orleans mrs hennln said that mr haslam had stopped at he same hotel she did at new orleans and t he was also at pass christian when she was hero also she said that mr hn lain and herself had sometimes xx themselves as brother and sister bm he manner plainly said â– bo goodness .,..,, i-ions suppose we did what of it , it had been said that the defense ha ,| john c h enning as he ap peared on the witness stand yesterday to corroborate his wife's story of the plot to ruin clarence s funk henning's real confession given for first time by harry m friend declares he heard 600,000 was price of the conspiracy to ruin funk the real confession of john c henning obtained by the state which forms the basis for his direct examination on the witness stand is filled with testimony corroborative of the amazing statements made by his wife josephine o'reilly henning there are two remarkable disclosures made by henning one is that the only price he ever heard mentioned as pay for the conspiracy against clarence s punk was 600,000 the other is that henning says he was kept in doubt about his wife's position in the case the examiner makes public for the first time extracts from this docu ment which is to play such a prominent part in the prosecution of the charges against attorney daniel donahoe and detective isaac stiefel ine iciÃŸ mensc sum he to i following mm made to the attorni h tii;-h revelation in miuh this propo i various times one i after been i to did i blm thousand i above a joke i lo about i her hardly i a on ber i the talked i uer i ner i her believe i ;,. n ,, i | oyc(1 i ,â€ž,..., h palmer : i i m , uk m 1,1 itenuetlm the that it timel the of theh lo mr i home he living i ivblle i really i about i i he i the i after a time that there was some heinous offense that had been eom itted witb mrs henning anyway it seemed to give me that impres sion later on i found it out but at that time i really did not know i never even heard about mr fnnk until i went to donahoe's office henning declared that on his visit to donahoe's ofÃŸce auy reference made about funk and his wife was made by donahoe and not by him i donahoe wife kept secret this affair was all mysterious p me it was so mysterious thai 1 had believed it must be on the square 1 never even heard the heppiier worn an's story about seeing mr fnnk and my wife together 1 knew noth ing about it therefore i could not have given it to mr donahoe henning declares that all arrangements in regard to the alienation suit against mr funk and iu which he henning appeared as the plaintiff were made with his wife he says he did not even know the amount sued for practically nothing was said ro me definitely it waa all done through my wife whether mr donahoe was skeptical of me all this while or not ido not know it seems he never did trust me all the arrangements for the suit were made with my wife i was not taken into their confidence and did not learn the amount asked in ihe suit until some time after it had been filed following ihe discovery of henning ami his wife ln mobile ala by the exam iner on the day the civil suit was filed helming states that he and iis wife were kept a part there wss constantly a gulf between myself am jo whether mr donahoe '. was wariilu in 1 ;- aliopit me nr whether s "" 2d p c ge 6th qolumn ' conttnued on 2d page sth column ______ i"l , c'*t~i'c~l~l**l"-'*-"i , i"i**i*'i"i"i , i**lvx"l , i**i"Â»"-"i i^^l'*^^l'^i l l''l^^l*'l'^l''l^â€¢l^^l''i'^l 11,1,'i i i , i 1 1 i these are advertising days the force of the purchasing power of the immense '. circulation of the sunday examiner was felt yesterday in â€¢ every Chicago store that advertised in sunday's paper there j were over 528,000 papers actually sold â€” more than all the j other Chicago papers combined there are two facts f to drive home : i to the purchaser â€” that the Chicago stores were never t before better equipped with fall winter and holiday stocks to the advertiser â€” that this gives promise of being i chicago's greatest holiday buying season and the one way > to do business is to tell the people what you have to sell â€” and j tell it sunday monday tuesday wednesday thursday fri l day saturday and then again on sunday and every day examiner's s orn statement made to the u s government fc sunday 528,328 daily 240,366 these re till buying days r"l--j i^."i^mfjl^-."1 examiner leads in circulj^ton the daily and sunday examiner i october sold more papers in the city of Chicago than any other two morning papers with several thousand to spare circulation books open to the iuspeclion ol any advertiser Chicago and vicinity fair f^v and colder tuesday wednesdayy vsy_/ji r - fair moderate winds tuesday be coming variable wednesday i range of temperatures yesterday 50 on 7 . ("__^_ j igtiest s8 s|w|n v^st ; lowest ...._. 41 1 0 v s '

Chicago examiner vol xl no 272 a m tuesday Chicago november 4 1913 tuesday flegtst-rej in u s patent oftie price one cent s?Â«sffe_ss u s demands huerta's immediate retirement stipulates provisional presi dency shall not be turned over to any partisan of the present administration blanquet is barred clash is â€¢ expected to follow the de mand warships ready to shell towns along coast special cable to the examiner mexico city nov 3 without waiting for the formal report of president huerta on the results i of the farcical election held nine days ago the wash ington administration has presented a formal de i mand for the resignation of kuerta the demand was presented last evening by : charge d'affaires o'shaughnessy to senor rabago huerta's secretary no reply or st-tenient of any 1 kind has been forthcoming from huerta or any mem ber of his official famiiy the american demand is not only that huerta : shall resign but also that the provisional presid-_cy shall not be turned over to any partisan of the pre i ent administration this means that general aure i liana blanquet minister of war ij and who ran for vice president on 1 the ticket with huerta oannol take i the presidency if huerta steps out it could not be learned to-night i whether the demand for i huerta's resignation was accoin i panied by any further suggestion i for the holding of an election it has been hinted that felix i diaz may figure in some way in the i plan of the united states for re i habilitation of the mexican govern i ment i await huerta i announcement some definite announcement of i huerta's intentions is expected to i be made to members of the diplo i matic corps who were summoned to i the palace to-night the represen i tatives of germany norway and i russia are absent at vera i cruz but understood that they i are fully advised of the latest de 1 velopments as is special envoy i lind news of carranza's appeal to sec i retary of state bryan was received i here to-day and in view of the atti i tude the washington governij i ment is deemed possible tha t i carranza as the popular leader of a i large section of the people and an i advocate of the restoration of law i and order throughout the republic may have the implied if out i spoken indorsement of the united i states as the successor of huerta felix diaz it learned arrived i at havana ichanges iin the during the day rumors of im bportant pending changes the hcabinet have been actively circu hlated it was stated that members lof the cabinet had been at logger hheads over matters of financial cy including the granting of rich boil lands concessions to cowdray in mterests julian and isidir ftcho and mate h'riends former vice president ianion/corral were arrested to-day ________________ / 1 i roach quits as president of Chicago railways co traction head resigns after long dissension over ossoski's hos pital methods resulting in bus by being put ahead of him henry a blair succeeds man who was last executive held over from yerkes regime roach | remains on the directorate j joan m roach president of the chi ij_u railways company resigned yester day his resignation was accepted by the board of directors and henry a blair was elected in his place mr blair also will be chairman of the board of directors two causes underlie the resignation of | president roach the first and perhaps j the minor cause was a disinclination to play second fiddle to leonard a bus j by president of the Chicago city rail j ways company who was slated under the unified operation plan to be general \ presidetn of the combined roads the second ard chief reason ror the res ignatfotj is i factional labor light be i ween i faction beaded by john 31 roach nn oue side and henry a filair chairman if the hoard of directors on the other i rank a rose formerly chier lnvesti gaior for ihe Chicago railways company p'iaini department and agent for a fac tion of l lie car men'.ls local organization explained the second cou â€”-- night over the telephone t â€¢> on examiner re porter â€¢ objected to gray ghost president roach would not stand for sidney ossoski with his gray gnost au loiuoiiiln and his other peculiar methods ppf accident care said mr rose "_, ro years ago mr roach went after ossoski and hogarth he was successful in get ling hogarth his enmity to ossoski however has been shown in the fight and il incurred the ill feeling of chair man blair who was the original sponsor tor ossoski recently when the lanor delegation went to blair and demanded the resigna tion of ossoski on threat of a strike blair blamed the activity on roach at that time it was decided when the reorganiza tion and unified operation weut into ef fect to make roach a second barytone tip litisipy they knew him well enough to know that john m roach wouldn't tuke that kind of a job ' he left for florida before the directors meeting mr roach has beeu connected with pi ct railway operation in Chicago for more than forty years and his resigna tion takes from active service in chl ngo the last connection with the old yerkes regime mr roach wrote a letter of resigna tion he said he had often expressed his desire to retire and at bis last re-electiou ad taken the position with the under standing that he might do so mr roach entered the street car busi ness in Chicago as a conductor on a horse car for the old north Chicago street l.ailroad company on october 7 1872 before thai he had been a mining pros peetor a newspaper reporter and a schoolteacher when he got tired ot teaching behool he went back to mining mink all ihe money he bad collected from bis other ventures and came to 1 lii'-ago after si months on the back or a car he was made cashier nn the company and in 1879 he became purchasing agent in 1888 he became assistant superintend ent in isiio superintendent assistant â€¢ manager in 1892 second vice president ind manager in 189-l and iu 1597 he ob tained full operating control as tirst vi.'e president and general manager wa nexi to yerkes - he was ihe big man in traction circles finally within a me president of both the p ii lidated and the union trac tjppi companies the reorganization of the xortli and west side lines fouud iliiri head of the Chicago railways com nn.p p the lines were renamed and he j tion antil yesterday tl fa tal be had risen from the j lnl made him pamjlar with the men j i persocal in iit % ften was used i pr vpt-.t ini'or â€¢-%â– o>s to settle isp ppi hi inped inte 1 . â€¢., i and proiro ed a thorough pÂ»r ina investlgatlofc when ihe employes bd i b h_'--_t''h a "â– go is snu i 1 . i igeneral trite john m roach for sixteen years head of Chicago street rail ways who has resigned following the unifica tion of surface systems mrs stewart ill traffic is halted police turn vehicles into another street tc maintain quiet on account of the severe illness of mrs graeme stewart 920 lincoln parkway priimlnent in north side society circles two uniformed policemen were stationed yesterday near the stewart residence and prevented traffic passing there mrs stewart it was reported by a rel ative last night will recover if she obtains absolute quiet mrs stewart recently suffered an at tack of nephritis and at the present time she is an extremely nervous condition said dr philip schuyler doane son-in law of mrs stewart caroline de veaux is suing her husband former vaudeville artist uncovers evidence for her action new york nov 3 caroline da veaux a fashionable modiste np to three years ago of the vaudeville team of de veaux and de veaux to-day filed a suit lor divorce against her hus band wells g de veaux miss e j i_ewi is named mrs de veaux last march found a note in de veaux's pocket addressed my dearest daddy and signed your little girl postoffice gain is 314,000 in month increase of 14.86 per cent over same period last year october business at ihe Chicago post office showed an increase over the cn responding mouth f inst yen ramoumiug to over 14,000 n percentage of gain of 14.86 per cent the largest item of re ceipts was the sale pf stamps and slumped paper totaling 74,5(i."i as compared with 1,968,500.50 for october of 1912 mother kidnatps 75,000 baby in crowded court mrs claudia dillon outwits and outbluffs roomful of bailiffs and lawyers jwoman overrules judge vanishes with six-year-old heir that court awarded to cus tody of guardian the way mrs claudia dillon outwitted i and outbluffed all the bailiffs and deputy j sheriffs ln the county building breezily set aside the authority of the circuit court snatched her 70,000 six-year-old son scott arthur right out or the grip of the law and straightway vanished ln ' broad daylight while a staff of lawyers ! blinked confusedly all this makes one lof the most incredible stories that ever were true the only legal result of proceedings | before judge adelor j petit over the i custody of scott arthur dillon was to ! leave that six-year-old boy legally â€” but not literally in the hands of mcc'lam reinhardt underwriter for the equitable , life assurance company as guardian reinhardt approached to take cnarge gfet away get away screamed the mother you shan't have him she i was formidably hysterical and reinhardt hesitated so did all the court officers they stood in a circle around the mother and her child mrs dillon started for the door apparently seeing nobody but the youugster whose face was held close to hers mother overrules judge reinhardt stepped forward he had just won a somewhat protracted legal battle and there before his eyes his vic tory was walking away from him he stopped squarely in front of mrs dillon madame you know wnat the court has decided surely you out of my way cried the mother don't talk to me of courts this is my child don't you suppose _ know that do i have to have a court to tell me my child is mine but madame don't touch me if you do _ 11 i'll have you arrested for assault here of ficer reinhardt backed off suddenly taken completely off guard his lawyers set forth in hot pursuit of judge petit who had retired to his chambers oblivious of the fact that mrs dillon had overruled him the woman walked to the elevator a gaping crowd opening before her to give her passage she stepped out of the ele vator at the ground floor and walked out of the building hardly had she passed the door when a lawyer his trance dis pelled burst down the stairway crying stop that woman but she was out of sight by that time and at a late hour last night no trace of her had been found it was a kidnaping out of a courtroom and she had got away with it scott arthur dillon and his infant brothers benjamin and jay are among the heirs to the huge estate of mrs mary c dillon their grandmother reinhardt another heir was recently appointed guardian to scott arthur by the ford county court reinhardt then took the child guardian to give up what mrs dillon the mother did was to demand a writ of habeas corpus un der that reinhardt took the boy before judge petit yesterday where mrs dillon made a tearful plea for custody judge petit decided that he could not interfere i witb the ford county court's order ' which means that reinhardt is still the legal custodian of the child it was then ; that mrs dillon overruled the court mrs dillon according to her attorney . thomas j o'hare is in Chicago at the j home of relatives and she has her three i children with her but the lawyer re i fuses to tell the address as for reinhardt's plans neither he nor his lawyers would divulge them lt is said however that he is inclined to give up the fight 1 only went into it as a matter of duty he is quoted as having said to a friend in the courtroom mrs dillons husband is in new mex ico where he is said to have been in trouble recently with the law he and his wife have been separated tor some time the three children from three to six years old are the wealthy members of the family and they are verv popu i lar patten defeated in bond issue battle association votes to postpone action in evanston in spile of protests from james a pat ten of wbeat corner fame in the inter ests of the taxpayers and of mrs rat ten who is a member of the school board the members of the north end improvement association in evauston last night roted to urge a postponement of the special election called by the school board for november 15 that election is to decide a bond issue of 0,000 to build an addition to the high school the association decided it would not be i enough 12,000,000 garrett will attacked by kin cousins of late spinster left 10,000 sue philadelphia xov 3.-miss oiiva walter of baltimore a distant cousin of miss julia garrett who died recently bequeathing the bulk of her fortune es timated at 1_,000,000 to isaac t starr her fiscal agent and cut off her relatives with trifles to-day in the orphans court filed an appeal from the decision of reg ister martin who admitted the garrett will to probate joining miss walter in the suit is agnes w cook another cous in both were left 10,000 by the aged spinster missionary is found lying dead in home disappearance leads to discovery of body of oscar johnson the kev oscar johnson formerly a missionary to china was found dead yes terday in an oxygenless room at his home 3728 bosworth avenue a gas stove was flickering feebly he had been living alone bis wife having gone to california for her bealtb johnson represented in china the swed ish evangelical church of america his wife's ill health forced a return last sep tember after five years the rev carl benson pastor of the cuyler swedish mission church reported johnson's disappearance since friday de tectives found the missionary fully dressed on the bed idle eight years for fear of his friends mrs emma m farmer 2297 milwaukee avenue says she has a husband who dares not support her for fear of what his friends might say in her bill for divorce filed yesterday she quotes her mate as declaring that because ot his large number of influential friends it is impossible for him to go to work without exciting adverse criticism the husband is george t farmer his wife alleges that ever since their marriage in 1905 george has been living on the earnings of her dentistry shoots 2 officers one dead one dying springfield 111 xov john mar tin a special deputy sheriff was shot and instantly killed and j b bird de tective for the Illinois traction system was probably fatally wounded to-night by an unidentified negro who fired three hois at the officers while they were entering the outskirts of the city after arresting another negro at a coal mine near springfield all available polii-e and deputy slier iffs were rushed to ihe vicinity and ihe country for a radius of five miles is ipp fiig scoured for the slayer eugenic bridegroom jilts 100 women denver col xov m d bowen of denver the only prospective eugenic bridegroom who had volunteered his serv ices to the state board of health and who was held up as a possible husband to more than 100 women from all parts of me united states has backed out one hundred women all of whom say they are comely of good figure and in perfect health have been giveu the cold shoulder by one mere man banker stotesbury guards wife's photo j_j philadelphia nov edward t i | slotesbury sr member ot the banking c i firm of j p morgan sr co at last ha < f ! found a new method to punish newspn'i i ers he does not like he won't allow l them to publish a picture of mrs stotes vjtrary mr stotesbury has made good his j prohibition by bi ing every oi,e of tin â€¢ picture for â€” hlch mi stotesbury ever f l â– â– â– â– Â„â– _.â– mrs oviatt lost funk witness is found i by richard henry little i woman who is expected to sub 1 stantiate mrs henning's story â– of plot will take stand to day and tell secrets of suit henning bares relations with donahoe wife is questioned regarding her trips with d h haslam funk to testify margaret oviatt the long missing wit ness has been found a*i.l h is ready to testify for the state i thi prose.u tlon of daniel donahoe an j isaac stiefel for alleged conspiracy to lef-iuie the char acter of clarence s funk with that one fact revealed under dramatic circumstances yesterday after noon the prosecution acw.eyed the great est triumph it has known since the trial started margaret oviatt is an essential witness for the prosecution and she has been mysteriously missing for w s she i alleged to be the woman hired oy dona hoe to be a companion to mrs john c ejennins during the conspiracy against funk ber testimony is expected lo make that of mr henning hei'self na peachment-proof end of hunt dramatic funk himself realizing the importance of the woman concentrates the efforts of his whole investigating staff upon the search for her late yesterday after noon one of these investigators irst iuto the courtroom and almost fell to the floor as he shouted margaret oviatt is nere ready to testify mrs josephine henning as white as the proverbial sheet and so weak from her recent illness that she had to be supported on each side by two stalwart deputy sheriffs tottered into court and removed the fear on the part of the pro secution that she would be unable to complete her testimony mrs hen nlng took the stand at the begin ning of the afternoon session and while at times she looked as though she were about to faint she did not but replied to the questions hurled at her by attor ney forrest counsel for attorney don ahoe in a calm firm voice and at no time showed that anything said by mr forrest caused her the least embarrass ment the defense finished its cross examination of mrs henning at 3:30 without impairing any part of her direct examination d h haslam named after mrs henning left the stand her husband john c henning who brought the civil suit against mr funk for 25 000 was put on the stand and began on his version of the part he played in the alleged conspiracy he was on the stand iu the middle of his direct examination ' when court adjourned he will resume his testimony this morning the more important points he brought out yester day referred to the visits he declared he made to attorney donahoe's oftlce the personal interviews be bad wiih mr don ahoe ihe instructions he declares mr i donahoe gave him in regard lo the plot ! against mr funk and the sums of money i he claims mr donahoe paid him tor ! promising to perjure himself the most interesting part of mrs hen ning's cross-examination was in regard to her acquaintance with a david h haslam of st paul but her answers gave little or uo comfort to the defense mrs henning did uot show the slight est concern when attorney forrest launched the name of haslam on the tip of his index anger straight at her oh yes mrs henning knew mr haslam he was a pleasant gentleman with dia betes who had gone to mudlavia for treatment he was there when she vis ited the indiana health resort at the ln stance as she alleges of mr donahoe mrs henning looked most indifferently at attorney forest as he walked toward her aiming his f.nger and asked her if mr haslam had not inen with her at new orleans mrs hennln said that mr haslam had stopped at he same hotel she did at new orleans and t he was also at pass christian when she was hero also she said that mr hn lain and herself had sometimes xx themselves as brother and sister bm he manner plainly said â– bo goodness .,..,, i-ions suppose we did what of it , it had been said that the defense ha ,| john c h enning as he ap peared on the witness stand yesterday to corroborate his wife's story of the plot to ruin clarence s funk henning's real confession given for first time by harry m friend declares he heard 600,000 was price of the conspiracy to ruin funk the real confession of john c henning obtained by the state which forms the basis for his direct examination on the witness stand is filled with testimony corroborative of the amazing statements made by his wife josephine o'reilly henning there are two remarkable disclosures made by henning one is that the only price he ever heard mentioned as pay for the conspiracy against clarence s punk was 600,000 the other is that henning says he was kept in doubt about his wife's position in the case the examiner makes public for the first time extracts from this docu ment which is to play such a prominent part in the prosecution of the charges against attorney daniel donahoe and detective isaac stiefel ine iciÃŸ mensc sum he to i following mm made to the attorni h tii;-h revelation in miuh this propo i various times one i after been i to did i blm thousand i above a joke i lo about i her hardly i a on ber i the talked i uer i ner i her believe i ;,. n ,, i | oyc(1 i ,â€ž,..., h palmer : i i m , uk m 1,1 itenuetlm the that it timel the of theh lo mr i home he living i ivblle i really i about i i he i the i after a time that there was some heinous offense that had been eom itted witb mrs henning anyway it seemed to give me that impres sion later on i found it out but at that time i really did not know i never even heard about mr fnnk until i went to donahoe's office henning declared that on his visit to donahoe's ofÃŸce auy reference made about funk and his wife was made by donahoe and not by him i donahoe wife kept secret this affair was all mysterious p me it was so mysterious thai 1 had believed it must be on the square 1 never even heard the heppiier worn an's story about seeing mr fnnk and my wife together 1 knew noth ing about it therefore i could not have given it to mr donahoe henning declares that all arrangements in regard to the alienation suit against mr funk and iu which he henning appeared as the plaintiff were made with his wife he says he did not even know the amount sued for practically nothing was said ro me definitely it waa all done through my wife whether mr donahoe was skeptical of me all this while or not ido not know it seems he never did trust me all the arrangements for the suit were made with my wife i was not taken into their confidence and did not learn the amount asked in ihe suit until some time after it had been filed following ihe discovery of henning ami his wife ln mobile ala by the exam iner on the day the civil suit was filed helming states that he and iis wife were kept a part there wss constantly a gulf between myself am jo whether mr donahoe '. was wariilu in 1 ;- aliopit me nr whether s "" 2d p c ge 6th qolumn ' conttnued on 2d page sth column ______ i"l , c'*t~i'c~l~l**l"-'*-"i , i"i**i*'i"i"i , i**lvx"l , i**i"Â»"-"i i^^l'*^^l'^i l l''l^^l*'l'^l''l^â€¢l^^l''i'^l 11,1,'i i i , i 1 1 i these are advertising days the force of the purchasing power of the immense '. circulation of the sunday examiner was felt yesterday in â€¢ every Chicago store that advertised in sunday's paper there j were over 528,000 papers actually sold â€” more than all the j other Chicago papers combined there are two facts f to drive home : i to the purchaser â€” that the Chicago stores were never t before better equipped with fall winter and holiday stocks to the advertiser â€” that this gives promise of being i chicago's greatest holiday buying season and the one way > to do business is to tell the people what you have to sell â€” and j tell it sunday monday tuesday wednesday thursday fri l day saturday and then again on sunday and every day examiner's s orn statement made to the u s government fc sunday 528,328 daily 240,366 these re till buying days r"l--j i^."i^mfjl^-."1 examiner leads in circulj^ton the daily and sunday examiner i october sold more papers in the city of Chicago than any other two morning papers with several thousand to spare circulation books open to the iuspeclion ol any advertiser Chicago and vicinity fair f^v and colder tuesday wednesdayy vsy_/ji r - fair moderate winds tuesday be coming variable wednesday i range of temperatures yesterday 50 on 7 . ("__^_ j igtiest s8 s|w|n v^st ; lowest ...._. 41 1 0 v s '